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Friday, May 5, 2017

Romanian senators voted
down a measure that would have pardoned officials convicted of
corruption on Thursday, just a day after the senate’s legislative
affairs committee had agreed upon it. What changed?
Up to two thousand angry Romanians took to the streets. “We don’t want to be a country of thieves!,” they shouted.

The whole episode was reminiscent of protests that happened back in February.
Then, hundreds of thousands took to the streets to push back against
legislation that would have decriminalized certain cases of official
misconduct where the amounts involved are less than $48,000 — which,
coincidentally, would have covered Liviu Dragnea. Dragnea is not prime
minister, but he is nevertheless regarded as the head of Romania’s
ruling Social Democratic party — and is charged with defrauding the
state of roughly $25,800.

That legislation was pulled, criticized by Romanian President Klaus
Iohannis and the powers that be in Brussels, although protests continued
for a while thereafter.

“This bill withdrawn today was in the same vein, but even more brazen,
pardoning officials jailed for corruption, abuse of office, etc. or
reducing their sentences significantly—so no wonder people poured to the
streets again,” Zselyke Csaky of Freedom House told Foreign Policy.

Given that last potentially corruption-enabling legislation resulted in
the largest protests the country had seen since 1989, one might wonder
why legislators were even considering an amendment that would allow
convicted government officials to get off scot free, or nearly so.

According to a statement by
one of the men behind the amendment — Traian Basescu, who ran for
office on an anti-corruption platform — it was proposed because “Romania
needs a clean slate.”

Csaky seems it somewhat differently. “Much of the Romanian political
class is still beholden to a system that rewards cronyism, patronage,
and under-the-table dealings,” she said. The support from members of the
ruling party demonstrates the degree of political resistance to rooting
out corruption in Romania, she said.

The response from the international community was decidedly more muted,
although the proposal goes farther than that which was protested in
February. However, Romanian Prime Minister Sorin Grindeanu, Iohannis,
and Dragnea each came out against the amendment.

But they did not come out as forcefully as the hundreds who took to the streets Wednesday night, or those who drove around
parliament honking their horns on Thursday, or the activists who called
for new protests Thursday night and Saturday — that is, the Romanian
people.